Some investors look to buy as stock market enters correction

Some investors look to buy as stock market enters correction
Recent volatility has been a cold reminder of why stocks are generally considered long-term investments.
SEP 03, 2015
With the stock market's correction no longer a matter of if, some market watchers and financial advisers have taken to preaching a sense of calm as investors hunker down for a heretofore rare bout of volatility. “We could argue that it is unusual to have this kind of correction all happen in a span of a few days, but there's really nothing unusual about having a stock market pullback,” said John Buckingham, chief investment officer at AFAM Capital. The S&P 500 Index, which was down more than 2.5% in mid-day trading Tuesday, has gained 2.8% since bottoming out a week ago. But even at its current level, the benchmark is down 9.8% from its July 20 peak. For investors who haven't experienced a pullback of 10% or more since 2011, the recent stock market ride has been a cold reminder of why stocks are generally considered long-term investments. “This is a correction, but it's probably not the beginning of a bear market,” said David Spika, global investment strategist at GuideStone Funds. “It generally takes a few months for the damage to be repaired, which includes some big down days followed by rallies and then legs back down,” he added. “It's very likely the market will retest the lows of last week.” LOOKING FOR A RALLY With history as his guide, Mr. Spika is looking out beyond the next few months of anticipated downward moves for stocks to a three-month rally period, during which “the market regains all the losses.” For asset managers like Mr. Buckingham, the biggest challenge is knowing when to deploy the cash he has been building up. Across various separately managed account portfolios, he has increased cash allocations to between 5% and 8%, up from a typical allocation of less than 2%. “There really aren't a lot of great options for investors, which is why I don't see this pullback extending out to a bear market,” Mr. Buckingham said. “Right now, we're licking our chops looking to use some of the cash we've accumulated.” Among the unique features of the current correction is that it is happening when the Federal Reserve's unprecedented monetary policy has left investors with few valuable options beyond stocks. In essence, after seven years of seeing the stock market chug steadily higher, investors keep mustering up the courage to either sit tight or buy low at every opportunity. WILD CARDS “There's clearly a lot of institutional skittishness, and the market is trying to have a correction, which is a path we started down last week,” said Steven Wruble, chief investment officer at RiskX Investments. “There are a couple of wild cards in terms of what the Fed might do and there's even talk of more quantitative easing, and we are finally getting a more realistic view of China's economy,” he added. “But this is not the start of a massive bear market, even though we are flirting with correction territory, which is probably overdue.” Expanding on the overdue theme, Dick Pfister, the president and chief executive of AlphaCore Capital, said, “This is the kind of thing we've been waiting for.” Mr. Pfister, who builds portfolios of alternative-strategy mutual funds for financial advisers, said that the stock market downturn has helped alternative strategies shine by comparison, but any focus on alternative strategies also illustrates the extreme performance dispersion within the sub-categories. “The rub on alternatives is that there's so much dispersion that you have to go in and make sure the funds are really doing what they say they're doing,” he added. “It's not impossible for an adviser to do the due diligence, but you have to go in with your eyes wide open and not follow the herd.” Along those lines, he cited the Boston Partners Long-Short Equity Fund (BPLSX), which gained 2.75% in August, while the S&P 500 fell by 6.03%. On a 12-month-trailing basis, the Boston Partners fund was down 8.4%, and in the 84th percentile of the long-short category. “That's a fund that hadn't had a great 12-month history, but it was one of our best performers in August,” Mr. Pfister said.

Latest News

NASAA moves to let state RIAs use client testimonials, aligning with SEC rule
NASAA moves to let state RIAs use client testimonials, aligning with SEC rule

A new proposal could end the ban on promoting client reviews in states like California and Connecticut, giving state-registered advisors a level playing field with their SEC-registered peers.

UBS sees a net loss of 111 financial advisors in the Americas during the second quarter
UBS sees a net loss of 111 financial advisors in the Americas during the second quarter

Some in the industry say that more UBS financial advisors this year will be heading for the exits.

JPMorgan reopens fight with fintechs, crypto over fees for customer data
JPMorgan reopens fight with fintechs, crypto over fees for customer data

The Wall Street giant has blasted data middlemen as digital freeloaders, but tech firms and consumer advocates are pushing back.

The average retiree is facing $173K in health care costs, Fidelity says
The average retiree is facing $173K in health care costs, Fidelity says

Research reveals a 4% year-on-year increase in expenses that one in five Americans, including one-quarter of Gen Xers, say they have not planned for.

Advisor moves: NY-based Coastline wealth adds three teams with over $430M in assets
Advisor moves: NY-based Coastline wealth adds three teams with over $430M in assets

Raymond James also lured another ex-Edward Jones advisor in South Carolina, while LPL welcomed a mother-and-son team from Edward Jones and Thrivent.

SPONSORED How advisors can build for high-net-worth complexity

Orion's Tom Wilson on delivering coordinated, high-touch service in a world where returns alone no longer set you apart.

SPONSORED RILAs bring stability, growth during volatile markets

Barely a decade old, registered index-linked annuities have quickly surged in popularity, thanks to their unique blend of protection and growth potential—an appealing option for investors looking to chart a steadier course through today's choppy market waters, says Myles Lambert, Brighthouse Financial.